Study is decoding blue light's mysterious ability to alter body's natural clock
Study is decoding blue light's mysterious ability to
alter body's natural clock
December 2nd, 2014 in Biology / Cell & Microbiology
Study is decoding blue light’s mysterious ability to
alter body’s natural clock
A study funded by the National Institutes of Health is
unraveling the mystery of how blue light from residential and commercial
lighting, electronic devices and outdoor lights can throw off-kilter the
natural body clock of humans, plants and animals, leading to disease.
Exposure to blue light is on the increase, says chemist
Brian D. Zoltowski, Southern Methodist University, Dallas, who leads the study,
"Protein : Protein interaction networks in the circadian clock."
At the right time of day, blue light is a good thing. It
talks to our 24-hour circadian clock, telling our bodies, for example, when to
wake up, eat and carry out specific metabolic functions.
In plants, blue light signals them to leaf out, grow,
blossom and bloom. In animals, it aids migratory patterns, sleep and wake
cycles, regulation of metabolism, as well as mood and the immune system.
But too much blue light—especially at the wrong
time—throws biological signaling out of whack.
"As a society, we are using more technology, and
there's increasing evidence that artificial light has had a negative
consequence on our health," said Zoltowski, an assistant professor in
SMU's Department of Chemistry.
"Our study uses physical techniques and chemical
approaches to probe an inherently biological problem," he said. "We
want to understand the chemical basis for how organisms use light as an
environmental cue to regulate growth and development."
Zoltowski's lab was awarded $320,500 from the National
Institute of General Medical Sciences of the National Institutes of Health to
continue its research on the impact of blue light.
The lab studies a small flowering plant native to Europe
and Asia, Arabidopsis thaliana. The flower is a popular model organism in plant
biology and genetics, Zoltowski said.
Although signaling pathways differ in organisms such as
Arabidopsis when compared to animals, the flower still serves an important
research purpose. How the signaling networks are interconnected is similar in
both animals and Arabidopsis. That allows researchers to use simpler genetic
models to provide insight into how similar networks are controlled in more
complicated species like humans.
Understanding the mechanism can lead to targeted drug
treatments
In humans, the protein melanopsin absorbs blue light and
sends signals to photoreceptor cells in our eyes. In plants and animals, the
protein cryptochrome performs similar signaling.
Much is known already about the way blue light and other
light wavelengths, such as red and UV light, trigger biological functions
through proteins that interact with our circadian clock. But the exact
mechanism in that chemical signaling process remains a mystery.
"Light is energy, and that energy can be absorbed by
melanopsin proteins that act as a switch that basically activates everything
downstream," Zoltowski said.
Melanopsin is a little-understood photoreceptor protein
with the singular job of measuring time of day.
When light enters the eye, melanopsin proteins within
unique cells in the retina absorb the wavelength as a photon and convert it to
energy. That activates cells found only in the eye—called intrinsically
photosensitive retinal ganglian cells, of which there are only about 160 in our
body. The cells signal the suprachiasmatic nucleus region of the brain.
"We keep a master clock in the suprachiasmatic
nucleus—it controls our circadian rhythms," he said. "But we also
have other time pieces in our body; think of them as watches, and they keep
getting reset by the blue light that strikes the master clock, generating
chemical signals."
The switch activates many biological functions, including
metabolism, sleep, cancer development, drug addiction and mood disorders, to
name a few.
"There's a very small molecule that absorbs the
light, acting like a spring, pushing out the protein and changing its shape,
sending the signal. We want to understand the energy absorption by the small
molecule and what that does biologically."
The answer can lead to new ways to target diabetes, sleep
disorders and cancer development, for example.
"If we understand how all these pathways work,"
he said, "we can design newer, better, more efficacious drugs to help
people."
Chemical signal from retina's "atomic clock"
synchronizes circadian rhythms
Besides increased reliance on artificial lighting indoors
and outdoors, electronic devices also now contribute in a big way to blue light
exposure. Endless evening hours on our smartphones and tablets with Candy
Crush, Minecraft or Instagram don't really help us relax and go to sleep. Just
the opposite, in fact.
The blue glow those devices emit signals our circadian
clock that it's daytime, Zoltowski said. Red light, on the other hand, tells us
to go to sleep.
Awareness of the problem has prompted lighting
manufacturers to develop new lighting strategies and products that transition
blue light to red light toward evening and at night, Zoltowski said.
In plants, the researchers study how the absence of
"true dark" in nature due to artificial light can reduce yields of
farm crops and promote crop disease.
For example, fungal systems rely on blue light to
proliferate, forming pathogens known as blight in crops resulting in leaves
that look chewed on and reducing yields.
"We study fusarium and verticillium," Zoltowski
said. "They cause about $3 billion worth of crop damage a year to wheat,
corn, soybeans—the staple food crops."
Understanding their ability to infect crops would allow
scientists to potentially design small molecules that target and disrupt the
fungal system's circadian clock and neutralize their proliferation.
Research to understand how light and clock regulation are
coupled
In animals, Zoltowski's lab studies the blue light
pathway that signals direction to birds and other animals that migrate. Blue
light activates the protein that allows various species to measure the earth's
magnetic field for directionality. For example, Monarch butterflies rely on the
cryptochrome photoreceptor for their annual migration to Mexico.
"We're interested in how these pathways are
regulated in a diverse range of organisms to understand how we can manipulate
these pathways to our advantage," he said, "for health consequences
and to improve agriculture yields."
The researchers will map the reaction trajectory
beginning from the initial absorption of the photon to the point it alters an
organism's physiology.
Zoltowski notes that light is just one of a handful of
external cues from our environment that trigger biological processes regulating
the circadian clock. Others include temperature changes, feeding and
metabolites.
More information:
"Mechanism-based tuning of a LOV domain photoreceptor." Nature
Chemical Biology 5, 827 - 834 (2009) Published online: 30 August 2009 DOI:
10.1038/nchembio.210
"Conformational switching in the fungal light sensor
Vivid." Science. 2007 May 18;316(5827):1054-7.
"Structure of full-length Drosophila
cryptochrome." Nature. 2011 Nov 13;480(7377):396-9. DOI:
10.1038/nature10618.
Provided by Southern Methodist University
"Study is decoding blue light's mysterious ability
to alter body's natural clock." December 2nd, 2014.
http://phys.org/news/2014-12-decoding-blue-mysterious-ability-body.html
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